by Christine Bierre
The first national secretary of the Ivory Coast Workers Party discusses his party’s plans for economic revival of the country.
by Elke Fimmen
Croatia’s foreign minister spoke with EIR in Vienna, following a press conference calling for international recognition of and support for his besieged country.
by Anno Hellenbroich
The head Armenia’s Union of Constitutional Rights discusses the political situation following Armenia’s referendum for independence.
by Alan Clayton
Haig’s Command, by Dennis Winter.
by Nancy Spannaus
Iraq, Military Victory, Moral Defeat, by Thomas C. Fox, and Desert Mirage, The True Story of the Gulf War, by Martin Yant.
by Silvia Palacios
A “Free Market” Constitution.
by Rainer Apel
Transatlantic Aerospace Wars.
by Carlos Wesley
U.S. Government Drug-Dealing Covered Up.
by Cynthia R. Rush
Tensions Mount Between Peru, Ecuador.
Thatcherism Brought Bankruptcy Home.
by Marsha Freeman
A new age of exploration would be a unifying focus for east European and U.S. high-technology industries facing shutdown.
by Christopher White and John Hoefle
While the White House conducts emergency sessions with bank regulators and business leaders, the new proposals coming out are each more ludicrous than the last. How about the idea of renaming empty office buildings as “residences,” so the banks can reduce the amount of capital they must carry to offset commercial real estate loans?
by Christine Bierre
An interview with Francis Wodié.
by Sue Atkinson
ConAgra’s Profits Soar.
by Linda Everett
The ideologues of the “right to die” are trying to cover up the growing evidence that proper treatment vastly enhances the chance that victims of severe head injuries will eventually emerge from coma. Linda Everett reports on these and other scientific breakthroughs which can give new hope to thousands of patients and their families.
by Jutta Dinkermann
A statement by Dr. Georg Götz, a physician from Germany and deputy chairman of the European Association for Physicians’ Action, opposing the “right to die” resolution put before the European Parliament.
by Gretchen Small
The script currently being followed by the U.S. government, in an effort to restore Marxist liberation theologian Father Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power, was drafted by the Trilateral Commission, and its aim is to extend the bankers’ rule under the rubric of “free trade.”
by Carlos Wesley
by Elke Fimmen
An interview with Croatian Foreign Minister Dr. Zvonimir Separovic.
by Konstantin George
by Fiorella Operto
A speech to the Group for Research and Information on Sects, a Catholic organization in Italy, on how the Anglo-American elites imposed their “Brave New World.”
by Anno Hellenbroich
An interview with Hrant Kachatrian.
by Gerardo Terán Canal
by Odile Mojon
by Laurent Schleret
by Gerald Rose
Why is there no serious opposition to Bush’s policies from the Democrats? The Democratic Party at the top today is the same apparatus as the Bush machine—in fact, the enforcement arm of it. A speech by Gerry Rose to a recent conference of Lyndon LaRouche’s philosophical association.
by H. Graham Lowry
The head of the U.S. State Department’s Agency for International Development has some skeletons in his closet—as George Bush well knows.
by Scott Thompson
The National Endowment for Democracy is under investigation for financial corruption and influence-peddling. It couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of guys.
Documentation: From a report by the General Accounting Office on the NED, and criticism of the agency by congressmen.
by William Jones